Find the right drills
Browse drills by sport, skill level, and the exact issue you want to fix — and practice them in an order that actually works.
- Type: Walkthrough
- Sport: All sports
- Level: Intermediate
- Area: Practice & Improve
- Watch: 0:29
- Read: 1 min
- Updated: Jun 2026
What you'll learn
- How to filter drills to your issue and level
- Why sequencing drills beats doing them at random
- How drill history feeds your progress
Before you start
- One clear priority to work on (run a swing analysis first if you have not).
- A little space to move and, ideally, a way to film a rep.
Step by step
Finding the right drill
Use the filters to find drills for your sport, skill level, and the specific issue you want to fix. Start with drills labeled as "high priority" for your current diagnosis.
How drills are organized
Drills are grouped by the swing issue they address — for example, club path, face angle, attack angle, timing, or contact point. Completing drills in a sequence is more effective than doing them randomly.
Try it now
Put this into practice in SwingVantage — free to start, no account needed.
Try it nowCommon mistakes
Trying to change everything at once.
Follow the one-fix idea: work a single priority, then retest before moving on.
Skipping the retest, so you never confirm the change stuck.
Re-record the same way after practicing and compare against where you started.
What happens next
Record a retest
Prove the change stuck — re-record and compare against where you started.
Continue your path
The next lessons that build on this one.
Trust & accuracy
SwingVantage is honest about certainty: findings are labeled by how they were produced and how confident they are. Treat them as a strong starting point you confirm with your own retest, not a final verdict.
Frequently asked
How many drills should I do at once?
Fewer than you think. Work the drills tied to your one fix, then retest — chasing many drills at once slows real change.
Full transcript
- Filter drills by your sport, skill level, and the issue you want to fix.
- Drills are grouped by what they target — path, face, timing, contact, and more.
- Start with the ones marked high-priority for your current diagnosis.
- Doing drills in a focused sequence beats doing random ones — quality over quantity.